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Total Issues: 39

One of the high-quality printed fanzines of the Thirties that regularly
featured fiction by professional writers. Titled changed to Fantasy
Magazine with the January 1934 issue. The installments of the Cosmos
round-robin were not printed in the issues themselves but as
separately-bound supplements.

Total Issues: 28

Primarily a poster magazine, it reprinted paperback cover paintings on
extra large pages and was issued unstapled, allowing the "prints" to be
easily removed and mounted. The issues were filled out with stories and
articles. Sales dropped steadily as the novelty wore off, and it was
briefly replaced by S.F. Digest, a more conventional SF magazine.

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Total Issues: 2

Gerald G. Swan published two magazines in 1943 entitled The Moon
Conquerors and Into the Fourth Dimension. These were the titles of
the lead stories but each was, in fact, a nearly complete reprint of an
issue of the US Science Fiction Quarterly.

The covers were extremely crude imitations by unknown artists of the
corresponding covers of the original magazines, printed in monochrome
blue, presumably a war-time austerity measure.

Total Issues: 10

Total Issues: 19+1+7+16+3+8+50+10=114

Fanzine which started in July 1953 under the name Psychotic as which it ran
for 19 issues followed by 1 (some sources say 3) under the title Science
Fiction Review before folding in 1955. It was relaunched in 1967 as Psychotic
#21, as which it ran for 7 issues before changing its name (again) to Science
Fiction Review in November 1968.

After 16 issues it was relaunched in 1972 as Richard E. Geis, which, after 3
issues, changed its name to The Alien Critic as which it ran for 8 issues
before changing its name back to Science Fiction Review again and running for
a further 50 issues before folding in 1986.

It was relaunched by a different editor in 1990 but only lasted for 10 issues before folding
for good in May 1992.